Grow crisp, tasty lettuce with ease—from seed to salad bowl.
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Types
Some of our favorite varieties include:
- Crisphead: ‘Great Lakes’, ‘Ithaca’, ‘King Crown’, ‘Mission’, ‘Summertime’
- Romaine (Cos)/Butterhead: ‘Burpee Bibb’, ‘Cosmo Savoy’, ‘Green Towers’, ‘Little Gem’, ‘Paris White Cos’, ‘Parris Island’, ‘Valmaine’
- Loose-Leaf: ‘Black Seeded Simpson’, ‘Green Ice’, ‘Ibis’, ‘Lollo Rossa’, ‘Oak Leaf’, ‘Prizehead’, ‘Salad Bowl’, ‘Slobolt’
- Red Leaf: ‘New Red Fire’, ‘Red Sails’, ‘Ruby Red’ (Not recommended for hot weather areas; the red pigment absorbs more heat.)
…But there are so many more types of lettuce to explore! What are your favorites?
Gardening Products
Cooking Notes
Lettuce makes the perfect base for any number of salads. Try these eight great salad recipes with your harvest!
Yes, cut off those flowering stalks. When lettuce forms a flowering stalk and blooms, it is called bolting. This will make the lettuce more bitter, but you can try to slow it by cutting off the stalks as soon as you see them develop. You might also be able to slow or discourage bolting by partially shading the lettuce from the heat, keeping the soil evenly moist (but not soggy), and harvesting the outer leaves at regular intervals. Bolting happens when the temperatures become warmer and daylight lengthens. As an alternative, when you see signs of bolting, harvest the entire plant before the leaves become bitter.
First, make sure that you have a "heading" variety such as Iceberg or Romaine if you want a head to form.
Some types, such as Bibb lettuce, form a loose head. Iceberg won't head tightly in warmer climates and you should treat it as a leaf lettuce and harvest the leaves as they get large enough to eat.
Lettuce will head better if it stays cool. In warmer climates, it can be better to grow lettuce in the fall.
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